Pubdate: Sat, 14 Feb 2004 Source: Spartanburg Herald Journal (SC) Copyright: 2004 The Spartanburg Herald-Journal Contact: http://www.goupstate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/977 Author: Jim Davenport, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) ADVOCATES SAY DRUG DATABASE WILL CURB ABUSES COLUMBIA -- A statewide drug sales monitoring system will curb diversion of prescription medicine to drug dealers and abusers, advocates say. They want a state database to collect information on prescription drug sales ranging from morphine to cough medicine with codeine as part of an effort to catch people shopping their ailments to multiple doctors just to get powerful drugs. The state has no way of knowing the extent of the problem, though. "Without a program like this, we don't really know what's going on," said Wilbur Harling, with the state Bureau of Drug Control at the Department of Health and Environmental Control. Eighteen states have some sort of monitoring system. South Carolina would join Kentucky, Nevada and Utah with an electronic monitoring system, Harling said. "Nevada's and Kentucky's are the two models," said Jim Heins, spokesman for Purdue Pharma, the drug company that makes Oxycontin. Prescription abuse of that pain killer have prompted calls for better drug controls. With the Kentucky All Schedule Prescription Electronic Reporting system, doctors and pharmacists in Kentucky now "have a tool when they have suspicion," Heins said. Privacy advocates have reservations about collecting the information to begin with. While people do abuse prescription drugs and sell them, the plan "looks to me like using a howitzer to kill a fly," said John Ruoff, research director for the advocacy South Carolina Fair Share. The state last year arrested 400 people in cases involving prescription drug diversion, Harling said. "It looks like we're going to make about 500 arrests this year," he said. DHEC began trying to find legislators to support the effort two years ago. It was about the time that Rep. Tracy Edge, R-North Myrtle Beach, had been approached by a prescription drug peddling neighbor and as news was breaking of a widespread prescription Oxycontin abuse. "I had someone approach me in my own yard trying to sell me different forms of prescription drugs," Edge said. It brought prescription abuse too close to home just as headlines were filled with reports of the high-powered painkiller Oxycontin becoming the legal drug rage two years ago. In September, Dr. Michael Woodward, the owner of the Myrtle Beach Comprehensive Care and Pain Management Center was sentenced to 15 years for drug conspiracy, health care fraud and money laundering involving Oxycontin. The lack of a monitoring system means police enforcing drug laws mainly "catch people who are obviously selling on the street and they tend to track it from that angle." Edge has been quietly building support for a bill to create the database for the past two years with DHEC's help. But those efforts took an unusual turn this week when House Majority Leader Rick Quinn, R-Columbia, convinced a House Ways and Means subcommittee to include the database in its budget bill. Edge says it's best that the bill go through public hearings so concerns can be addressed. There are plenty of those. The data could be a treasure trove in the wrong hands. "It would be very valuable to a drug company," Ruoff said. But Quinn's version of the legislation says there's a maximum $5,000 fine for those with authorized access to the database disclosing it. Fines "certainly out to be higher," Ruoff said. "It should be more than the value of what you made off with." Edge's original bill called for a $5,000 fine and five years in prison. Edge says limits may be needed on how long the records are kept. Gil Lawson, spokesman for the Kentucky health department, says his state's system gathers 8 million records a year. None have been destroyed since the system started operating in 1997. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin